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IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INDUSTRY APPLICATIONS, VOL. 48, NO.

1, JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2012

211

An Analytical Evaluation of the Factor k 2


for Protective Conductors
Massimo Mitolo, Senior Member, IEEE, and Michele Tartaglia, Senior Member, IEEE

AbstractAt the occurrence of phase-to-ground faults, abnormal levels of thermal energy I 2 t, due to the Joule effect, will be
developed during the clearing time that protective devices take
to operate. The I 2 t, also referred to as specific energy or Joule
Integral, is accumulated within the elements forming the fault
loop, such as the protective conductors (also referred to as equipment grounding conductors), responsible to return ground-fault
currents to the source. As a consequence, the temperature of these
conductors elevates and may exceed, in the case of an incorrect
design, the maximum value that their insulation can withstand.
This dangerous situation can cause the failure of the conductor
insulation and/or trigger fires in neighboring materials. The maximum I 2 t that protective conductors can endure is, therefore,
crucial in order to guarantee the electrical safety. The parameters
on which the maximum I 2 t depends are described by the factor
k 2 , which will be herein discussed and analytically evaluated. The
intention of the authors is to provide a theoretical support to
the Power Systems Grounding Working Group of the Technical
Books Coordinating Committee IEEE P3003.2 Recommended
Practice for Equipment Grounding and Bonding in Industrial
and Commercial Power Systems; the working group is currently
elaborating a dot standard based on IEEE Standard 142-2007,
also referred to as the Green Book. To this purpose, a comparison
with existing formulas, currently present in codes, standards of
the International Electrotechnical Commission and of the IEEE,
as well in the literature, will be also presented.
Index TermsAdiabatic, ampacity, cables, equipment grounding conductor (EGC), fault duration, ground faults, I 2 t, Joule
integral, protective conductor, protective device.

N OMENCLATURE
iG (t)
0
f
M

Instantaneous ground-fault current.


Initial temperature of the protective conductor.
Final temperature of the protective conductor.
Maximum temperature that protective conductor insulation can withstand without damage.
R
Fault-loop resistance.
EGC Equipment grounding conductor.

Manuscript received June 24, 2011; accepted October 15, 2011. Date of
publication November 14, 2011; date of current version January 20, 2012. Paper
2011-PSEC-255, presented at the 2011 IEEE Industry Applications Society
Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL, October 913, and approved for publication
in the IEEE T RANSACTIONS ON I NDUSTRY A PPLICATIONS by the Power
System Engineering Committee of the IEEE Industry Applications Society.
M. Mitolo is with Chu & Gassman, Middlesex, NJ 08846 USA (e-mail:
mmitolo@chugassman.com).
M. Tartaglia is with the Dipartimento Ingegneria Elettrica, Politecnico di
Torino, 10129 Turin, Italy (e-mail: michele.tartaglia@polito.it).
Color versions of one or more of the figures in this paper are available online
at http://ieeexplore.ieee.org.
Digital Object Identifier 10.1109/TIA.2011.2175886

PE
0
20 .

Protective conductor.
Resistivity at 0 C.
Resistivity at 20 C.

I. I NTRODUCTION

HIS PAPER seeks to provide a theoretical validation of


existing formulas for sizing protective conductors (PE)
(also referred to as equipment grounding conductors, EGCs)
currently in use in codes, standards of the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) and IEEE standards, such as,
for example, [1] and [2].
Properly sizing PEs is extremely important, as at the occurrence of phase-to-ground faults, abnormal levels of thermal
2
t, also referred to as Joule Integral, occur. This energy
energy IG
develops during the clearing time that protective devices take to
operate and disconnect the faulty equipment. Such let-through
energy needs to be compared with the maximum thermal energy
that a given protective conductor can endure without damaging.
The evaluation of protective conductors maximum thermal
energy is, therefore, crucial in order to guarantee the electrical
safety of persons under ground-fault conditions.
This maximum admissible thermal energy of the PE not only
depends on its cross-sectional area, but also on its constituting
material (e.g., copper), its type of insulation (e.g., PVC), its
initial temperature 0 at the inception of the fault, and the
maximum temperature M that the conductor insulation can
withstand without damage.
The initial temperature 0 may be taken as the conductor maximum operating temperature in correspondence with
its current-carrying capability. This conservative assumption,
which may result in protective conductors oversizing, is indeed
more appropriate for line conductors involved in short circuits.
In these cases, in fact, the initial temperature of the conductors
at the inception of the short is the actual temperature in correspondence with the prefault load current; such temperature
is conservatively assumed as that in correspondence with the
ampacity1 of the cable.
On the contrary, the PE is generally at rest, as no current
normally circulates through it. Thus, if the protective conductor
is not incorporated in cables, and not bunched with other
cables, its initial temperature may be the ambient temperature
(conventionally 30 C).

1 Ampacity is defined as the maximum amount of electrical current a conductor can carry while its insulation remains within its temperature rating.
Exceeding temperature ratings shorten the useful life of conductors.

0093-9994/$26.00 2011 IEEE

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II. K 2 FACTOR FOR P ROTECTIVE C ONDUCTORS


To estimate the thermal stress to which protective conductors
are subject, we can initially assume that the let-through energy
is entirely accumulated within the PEs, and that there is no heat
dissipation by convection or radiation by the conductor (i.e.,
adiabatic conditions).
As anticipated, in order for the protective conductor not to
be damaged during the ground fault, the let-through energy
must not exceed the maximum thermal energy that the PE can
withstand. In formulas, and for the adiabatic case,
tf

i2G dt k 2 S 2 .

(1)

TABLE I
VALUES OF PARAMETERS FOR D IFFERENT
C ONDUCTIVE M ATERIALS OF PES

TABLE II
T EMPERATURE L IMITS FOR I NSULATION M ATERIALS OF P ROTECTIVE
C ONDUCTORS N OT I NCORPORATED IN C ABLES , AND
N OT B UNCHED W ITH OTHER C ABLES

The left-hand side of (1) is the let-through energy developed during the fault [3]; iG is the instantaneous ground-fault
current, S the cross-sectional area of the protective conductor
(mm2 ), tf is the clearing time of the protective device and k 2
is a factor that takes into account the resistivity, temperature
coefficient and heat capacity of the conductor material, the
initial temperature of the protective conductor at the inception
of the fault, and the maximum admissible temperature the
insulation of the PE can withstand without damage.
The factor k 2 is given by
k2 =

c
1 + 0 M
ln
.
0 0
1 + 0 0

(2)

The Appendix provides an analytical calculation for the


above factor k 2 .
If in (2), we pose = 1/0 and 0 = 20 /(1 + 20 0 ), as
per (A3), we obtain


c( + 20 )
M 0
ln 1 +
k =
20
+ 0
2

(3)

which is an equivalent formulation of the k 2 factor that can be


found in [4].
With the same positions, we can obtain the following formula, presented in [5]:
k2 =

c
(M + 1/0 )
.
(20 + 1/0 ) ln
20
(0 + 1/0 )

(4)

Equations (3) and (4), included in different standards, do


confirm the analytical calculation of the k 2 factor obtained
in (2).
Equations (2)(4) can be applied to conductor at different
rated voltages, whose temperature limits, for various types of
insulation, can be found in [5][8].
Equations (2)(4) can also be applied under nonadiabatic
conditions: differences in the calculated values of k 2 are only
significant for smaller cross-sectional areas of cables (less than
10 mm2 ).

III. VALUES OF PARAMETERS FOR D IFFERENT M ATERIALS


AND I NSULATIONS OF P ROTECTIVE C ONDUCTORS
Table I lists values of parameters for different conductive
materials of PEs to be used in the calculation of k 2 :
The nature of adjacent insulating materials limits the maximum admissible temperatures of protective conductors.
In the following tables, temperature limits for protective
conductors for ground-fault durations not exceeding 5 s are
listed. If ground-fault clearing times exceed 5 s, maximum
temperatures must be reduced according to the manufacturers
indications.
Temperature limits for insulation materials of protective conductors not incorporated in cables, and not bunched with other
cables, are listed in Table II [4], [6].
Temperature limits for insulation materials of protective
conductors as a core incorporated in a cable or not bunched
with other cables or insulated conductors, are listed in Table III
[4], [6].
Temperature limits for bare protective conductors in contact
with cable covering, but not bunched with other cables, are
listed in Table IV [4], [6].
Temperature limits for insulation materials of protective
conductors as a metallic layer of a cable (e.g., armor, metallic
sheath, concentric conductor, etc.) are listed in Table V [4], [6].
If protective conductors are bare and exposed to touch, or
in contact with combustible materials, their superficial temperature may be a reason of concern. In normal condition areas,
when there is no risk for the bare PE to cause damage to any
neighboring material, the maximum temperature to consider for
calculations should be 200 C. However, different temperature
limits can be adopted in different areas; if the bare protective
conductor is well visible and confined in restricted zones, the
maximum allowable temperature can be increased; on the other
hand, if the bare PE is in fire risk locations, its maximum

MITOLO AND TARTAGLIA: ANALYTICAL EVALUATION OF THE FACTOR k2 FOR PROTECTIVE CONDUCTORS

TABLE III
T EMPERATURE L IMITS FOR I NSULATION M ATERIALS OF P ROTECTIVE
C ONDUCTORS AS A C ORE I NCORPORATED IN A C ABLE OR B UNCHED
W ITH OTHER C ABLES OR I NSULATED C ONDUCTORS

213

TABLE VII
VALUES OF K 2 FOR I NSULATED P ROTECTIVE C ONDUCTORS N OT
I NCORPORATED IN C ABLES , AND N OT B UNCHED W ITH OTHER C ABLES

TABLE VIII
VALUES OF K 2 FOR P ROTECTIVE C ONDUCTORS AS A C ORE
I NCORPORATED IN A C ABLE OR B UNCHED W ITH OTHER
C ABLES OR I NSULATED C ONDUCTORS

TABLE IV
T EMPERATURE L IMITS FOR BARE P ROTECTIVE C ONDUCTORS IN
C ONTACT W ITH C ABLE C OVERING , B UT N OT B UNCHED
W ITH OTHER C ABLES

TABLE IX
VALUES OF K 2 FOR BARE P ROTECTIVE C ONDUCTORS IN C ONTACT W ITH
C ABLE C OVERING , B UT N OT B UNCHED W ITH OTHER C ABLES
TABLE V
T EMPERATURE L IMITS FOR I NSULATION M ATERIALS OF P ROTECTIVE
C ONDUCTORS AS A M ETALLIC L AYER OF A C ABLE

TABLE X
VALUES OF K 2 FOR P ROTECTIVE C ONDUCTORS
AS A M ETALLIC L AYER OF A C ABLE

TABLE VI
T EMPERATURE L IMITS FOR BARE PE W HERE T HERE I S N O
R ISK OF DAMAGE TO A NY N EIGHBORING M ATERIAL

temperature should be lowered. Table VI lists such temperature


limits as per [4] and [6].
It should be noted that due to safety considerations, such
as the risk of burns or of triggering fires or explosive atmospheres, the fusion temperatures of bare PEs, as maximum
allowed temperatures, are not considered in the IEC world.
Such temperatures would largely exceed the temperature limits
of Table VI; in fact [1] indicates that if fusing is a criterion,
then a final temperature of 1000 C for copper and 630 C for
aluminum may be used.

TABLE XI
VALUES OF K 2 FOR BARE PE W HERE T HERE I S N O R ISK OF
DAMAGE TO A NY N EIGHBORING M ATERIAL

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IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INDUSTRY APPLICATIONS, VOL. 48, NO. 1, JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2012

TABLE XII
A C OMPARISON OF VALUES OF K 2 O BTAINED W ITH D IFFERENT
F ORMULAE (P ROTECTIVE C ONDUCTORS N OT I NCORPORATED IN
C ABLES , AND N OT B UNCHED W ITH OTHER C ABLES XLPE)

compound with the assumption of adiabatic conditions during


ground faults in determining larger PE.

V. M INIMUM C ROSS -S ECTIONAL A REAS OF P ROTECTIVE


C ONDUCTORS IN A DIABATIC C ONDITIONS

IV. VALUES OF K 2 FOR P ROTECTIVE C ONDUCTORS


Based on initial and limit temperatures listed in Tables IVI,
the k 2 factor can be calculated according to (2) for any given
insulation and conductive material of wires. Tables VIIXI
report the results of the calculation:
The value of the k 2 factor can also be determined through
formulas currently present in literature; however, attention must
be paid to such formulas and on the assumptions on which they
are based.
In fact, the expression of the k 2 factor in [1] for copper and
aluminum are both incorrect. The Power Systems Grounding
Working Group of the Technical Books Coordinating Committee IEEE P3003.2 Recommended Practice for Equipment
Grounding and Bonding in Industrial and Commercial Power
Systems is aware of this issue. Thus, in the new dot standard
P3003.2, based on [1, Ch. 2], the following formulas, found
in [9] and [10] are being proposed for equipment grounding
conductors, respectively, in copper and aluminum:


 2
TM + 234
I
t = 0.0297 log10
(5)
A2
Ti + 234


 2
TM + 228
I
t = 0.0125 log10
(6)
A2
Ti + 228
where I is the fault current through the conductor in amperes,
A is the protective conductor cross-sectional area in circular
mils, t is the fault clearing time in seconds, Ti is the initial
operating temperature in degrees Celsius and TM is the maximum temperature for no damage in degrees Celsius. Reference
[1] also indicates that Ti is often taken as the conductor maximum operating temperature in correspondence with its currentcarrying capability rather than its initial temperature. This is a
conservative approach of which the designer should be aware,
as may result in protective conductor oversizing.
A comparison between the values of k 2 obtained with (2) and
2
2
(Ti = 90 C) calculated with (5) and
k30 (Ti = 30 C and k90
(6) is shown in Table XII for the case of protective conductors
not incorporated in cables, and not bunched with other cables
insulated in XLPE (M = 250 C).
It can be seen that (2), (5), and (6) substantially provide the
same results for 0 = 30 C (columns 2 and 3 of Table XII).
However, if 0 = 90 C is employed in (5) and (6), as implicitly
2
(column 4 of Table XII) are
allowed in [1], the values of k90
more than 30% lesser than the values k 2 calculated with (2)
(column 2 of Table XII). It is important to note that reduced
values of k 2 determine larger cross-sectional areas for the PE in
correspondence with the same ground-fault current and clearing
time of protective devices. This conservative approach does

The analytical evaluation of the integral of the left-hand side


of (1) is rather complex, as the ground-fault current is asymmetrical due to the development of a transient dc component
[11], [12]. The method proposed in [11] allows the evaluation
of the maximum possible thermal stress to conductors involved
in faults by taking into account the worst possible asymmetries
of fault currents due to both the making angle and the shortcircuit phase angle.
However, [4] and [13] indicate that if protective devices
can clear the ground fault within 5 s from its inception, the
following simplified formula may be used to determine the
minimum and safe cross-sectional area S(mm2 ) of PEs in
adiabatic conditions:
S

IG 
tf .
k

(7)

IG is the r.m.s. value of the prospective ground-fault current


circulating through the PE for a fault of negligible impedance,
and tf is the operating time of the protective device in correspondence with the ground-fault current. In reality, when the
ground-fault current is not constant, the error caused by the
simplification shown in (7) is acceptable provided that either
the dc transient component of the ground-fault current quickly
expires or protective devices do not clear the ground fault within
the first cycle. As per the above simplification, the method used
in [11] is not herein used.
It is important to note, though, that the optimum wire size of
the PE is not per se a guarantee of electrical safety for persons.
In fact, also, terminations, joints, bonding jumpers, etc., included within the ground-fault path must have equal, or greater,
thermal capabilities than that of the protective conductor.
If (7) produces nonstandard sizes, protective conductors of a
higher standard cross-sectional area must be used. In addition,
as anticipated in the previous section, the choice of using the
maximum operating temperature as 0 may lead to further
oversizing.
To better understand this issue, let us consider the TimeInverse trip curve as a function of the prospective ground-fault
current for a 20-A molded case circuit breaker (Fig. 1).
The trip curve of Fig. 1 provides the clearing times tf of the
circuit breaker in correspondence with any given value of the
ground-fault current. Such values are listed in Table XIII.
Table XIII also shows the values of calculated and trade
sizes of cross-sectional areas (columns 4 and 5) as per (7).
The two initial temperatures used in the calculation of k 2 are
0 = 30 C and 0 = 90 C, in the case of a copper protective
conductor not incorporated in cables, and not bunched with
other cables, insulated in XLPE (k = 175.55 and k90 = 141.99,
as per Table XII).
It can be clearly seen that the adoption of the operating
temperature of 90 C results in some cases in protective

MITOLO AND TARTAGLIA: ANALYTICAL EVALUATION OF THE FACTOR k2 FOR PROTECTIVE CONDUCTORS

215

TABLE XIV
C ONSTANTS X AND Y

VI. N ONADIABATIC M ETHOD

Fig. 1.

Time-Inverse trip curve for a 20-A molded case circuit breaker.

TABLE XIII
C ALCULATED AND T RADE S IZES OF C ROSS -S ECTIONAL A REAS OF
P ROTECTIVE C ONDUCTORS N OT I NCORPORATED IN C ABLES ,
AND N OT B UNCHED W ITH OTHER C ABLES XLPE

The assumption that under ground-fault conditions all the


thermal energy is accumulated within the protective conductors
may be in some case pessimistic, as heat transfer into the
neighboring environment does occur.
References [14] and [15] provide details for the nonadiabatic
method, which is valid for all ground-fault durations, and is
based on an empirical approach.
If part of the heat is dispersed toward adjacent bodies, the
permissible ground-fault current can increase, without risk of
damaging the protective conductor of a given cross-sectional
area. Alternatively, the wire size of the PE can be safely decreased with respect to the value determined with the adiabatic
method.
The permissible nonadiabatic ground-fault current INAD is
given by
INAD = IG

(9)

where is the nonadiabatic factor, which takes into account


heat loss into the adjacent components ( = 1 in adiabatic
conditions, whereas is > 1 in nonadiabatic conditions); IG
is the ground-fault current calculated with (7) in adiabatic
conditions.
In the case of insulated conductors as PEs, the nonadiabatic
factor is given by the following simplified empirical formula:

(10)
= 1 + XZ + Y Z 2 .
The constants X and Y for copper protective conductors are
presented in the following Table XIV, as a function of the PE
insulation, and for voltages 3 kV.
Z is defined as

(11)
Z = tf /S

conductor oversizing by one trade size, in the presence of the


same ground-fault current and clearing time.
Equation (7) can of course be used for protective conductors
such as armors, metallic sheaths, tapes, etc. In these cases,
we consider an equivalent cross-sectional area SE (mm2 ) given
by [5]:

20 P
(8)
SE =
R20
where 20 is the resistivity at 20 C (mm), R20 is the
resistance per kilometer at 20 C (km1 ), P is the mass per
kilometer (kg km1 ), is the specific mass (kg mm3 ).

where tf is the ground-fault duration (in s) and S is the PE


geometrical cross-sectional area (in mm2 ).
For the usual range of wire sizes encountered in the practice,
[14] indicates, as a decision-making criterion, to neglect the
improvement in the permissible ground-fault current when its
increase is less than 5%, that is, when INAD < 1.05IG . In
this case, the nonadiabatic method is not recommended to
determine the minimum cross section of PEs.
Based on this criterion, the authors have performed computations based on (10) to determine the values of trade wire sizes
for copper conductors, for which 1.05. These calculations
have taken into account different values of tf , as well as,
trade wire sizes from 1.5 to 300 mm2 . Threshold values for
S have been identified, below which the adiabatic hypothesis
is too pessimistic and protective conductors result oversized.

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IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INDUSTRY APPLICATIONS, VOL. 48, NO. 1, JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2012

TABLE XV
M AXIMUM VALUES FOR S FOR C OPPER PE S , FOR W HICH 1.05

Table XV lists the smallest values for S for copper wires, for
which 1.05, for tf equal to 0.1 s, 1 s, and 10 s.
According to (10), the maximum size for protective conductors for the nonadiabatic condition to be useful in practice is
S = 10 mm2 , as long as tf equals at least 0.1 s. Calculations
show, in fact, that for fault durations tf 0.1 s, the heat
exchange with the surrounding air or materials is negligible
(i.e.,
= 1) even for the smallest wire trade size of 1.5 mm2 .
VII. C ONCLUSION
The authors have proposed an analytical method for the
calculation of k 2 for protective conductors, which takes into
account the thermal characteristics of insulations, as well as of
neighboring materials. This has allowed the determination of
the optimum value of S.
The analytical results confirm the formulas currently present
in literature and to be adopted in P3003.2 for the adiabatic
case. However, such formulas only consider PEs as wires and
may lead to oversizing the protective conductors, of which the
engineer should be aware.
It has been substantiated, in fact, that two pessimistic choices
may be made: using the maximum operating current of protective conductors rather than the ambient temperature; considering the thermal phenomenon developing during ground faults
always adiabatic.
Compiling these two assumptions may lead to oversized
protective conductors by one or two trade sizes.

In adiabatic conditions, during the ground fault, the following thermal balance occurs:
l 2
i dt = S l c d
S G

() =

(A1)

where l is the length of the ECG, S its cross-sectional area


(mm2 ), its resistivity (mm), and c its volumetric heat
capacity (J/( C mm3 )); iG is the instantaneous ground-fault
current.
The left-hand side of (A1) quantifies the heat developed
by the fault current during the infinitesimal time dt, while
the right-hand side is the heat accumulated in the conductor
during the same time. d is the difference between the initial
temperature 0 of the conductor, at the inception of the fault,
and its temperature f , after the fault is cleared.
The resistivity of the PE is a function of the temperature
imposed by the ground fault and therefore does not remain constant. In general, () is not a linear function of the temperature;
however, if we assume that the temperature varies in a small
range, we can approximate () with a Taylor series. The Taylor


(n) (0 )
(0 )n
= (0 )+(1) (0 )(0 )
n!
n=0

=(0 )+(0 )0 (0 ) = (0 )[1+0 (0 )] (A2)


where the subscript (n) indicates the nth derivative of the
resistivity with respect to the temperature , evaluated at the
initial temperature 0 ; (0 ) represents the resistivity of the PE
at the initial temperature 0 ; 0 = (1) (0 )/(0 ) is the temperature coefficient of resistivity of the material of the PE at the
initial temperature 0.
We can write
() = (0 )(1 + 0 ).

(A3)

To calculate the heat accumulated in the protective conductor


during the ground fault, we need to integrate left- and righthand sides of (A1) between: the instant t = 0 of the inception
of the fault, and the instant tf of disconnection of the supply;
the temperature 0 of the PE at the inception of the fault and its
final temperature f when the fault is cleared.
We obtain
tf

i dt = c S
0

f
0

c S2
d
=

(0 )

f
0

d
.
(1 + 0 )

(A4)

Solving the above integral by substitution of the variable


[3], we obtain
tf

A PPENDIX

series is a linear representation of a function as an infinite sum


of terms based on the values of its derivatives evaluated at an
initial point. It is normally acceptable for accuracy to use a finite
number of terms of the series to approximate the function.
As a consequence, the resistivity can be written as a Taylor
polynomial as a function of :

cS 2
i dt =
0 0
2

1+
 0 f

1+0 0

cS 2
dx
1 + 0 f
=
ln
.
x
0 0 1 + 0 0

(A5)

In order to prevent damages to the insulation of the PE, the


final temperature f in (A5) must not exceed the maximum
temperature M that its insulation can withstand. Hence, if we
replace f with M , we can define the parameter k 2 as
k2 =

c
1 + 0 M
ln
.
0 0
1 + 0 0

(A6)

R EFERENCES
[1] IEEE Recommended Practice for Grounding of Industrial and Commercial Power Systems, IEEE Std. 142-2007, 2007.
[2] IEEE Recommended Practice for Protection and Coordination of Industrial and Commercial Power Systems, IEEE Std. 242-2001, 2001.
[3] M. Mitolo, Electrical Safety of Low-Voltage Systems. New York:
McGraw-Hill, 2009.
[4] Electrical Installations of BuildingsPart 5-54: Selection and Erection of
Electrical Equipment-Earthing Arrangements, Protective Conductors and
Protective Bonding Conductors, IEC 60364-5-54, Jun. 2002.
[5] Installations of Generation, Transmission and Distribution of Electric
Energy: Electric Cables, Italian Standard CEI 11-17, Jul. 2006.

MITOLO AND TARTAGLIA: ANALYTICAL EVALUATION OF THE FACTOR k2 FOR PROTECTIVE CONDUCTORS

[6] Short-Circuit Temperature Limits of Electric Cables With Rated Voltages of 1 kV (U m = 1.2 kV) and 3 kV (U m = 3.6 kV), IEC 60724,
Oct. 2000.
[7] Short-Circuit Temperature Limits of Electric Cables With Rated Voltages
From 6 kV (U m = 7.2 kV) up to 30 kV (U m = 36 kV), IEC 60986,
Oct. 2000.
[8] Short-Circuit Temperature Limits of Electric Cables With Rated Voltages
Above 30 kV (U m = 36 kV), IEC 61443, Jul. 1999.
[9] D. L. Beeman, Industrial Power Systems Handbook. New York:
McGraw-Hill, 1955.
[10] National Electrical Code, NFPA 70, 2011.
[11] M. Tartaglia and M. Mitolo, An analytical evaluation of the prospective
I 2 t to assess short circuit capabilities of cables and busways, IEEE
Trans. Power Del., vol. 25, no. 3, pp. 13341339, Jul. 2010.
[12] G. Parise and M. Adduce, Conductor protection against short circuit
current: Available I 2 t evaluation, in Conf. Rec. IEEE IAS Annu. Meeting,
1998, pp. 23362341.
[13] Electrical Installations of BuildingsProtection for SafetyProtection
Against Overcurrent, IEC 60364-4-43, Aug. 2001.
[14] Calculation of Thermally Permissible Short-Circuit Currents, Taking Into
Account Non-Adiabatic Heating Effects, IEC 60949, 1988.
[15] Calculation of Thermally Permissible Short-Circuit Currents, Taking Into
Account Non-Adiabatic Heating Effects, IEC 60949, Sep. 2008.

Massimo Mitolo (SM03) was educated in Italy. He


received the Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering
from the University of Naples Federico II, Naples,
Italy, in 1990, where his field of research was the
analysis and grounding of power systems.
He is currently the Assistant Electrical Department Head of Chu & Gassman Inc., Middlesex,
NJ. He has authored numerous journal papers, as
well as the textbook Electrical Safety of Low-Voltage
Systems.
Dr. Mitolo is a Registered Professional Engineer
in Italy. He is very active in the IEEE Industry Applications Society Industrial
and Commercial Power Systems Department, where he currently fills the positions of Vice Chair of the Power Systems Engineering (PSE) Main Technical
Committee, Chair of the Papers Review Subcommittee, Chair of the Power
Systems Analysis Subcommittee, and Chair of the Power Systems Grounding
Subcommittee. He is also an Associate Editor of the PSE IEEE ScholarOne
Manuscripts. He was also the recipient of the Lucani Insigni Award in 2009 for
merits achieved in the scientific field.

217

Michele Tartaglia (SM08) received the Laurea


degree in electrical engineering from the Politecnico
di Torino, Turin, Italy, in 1971.
In 1973, he joined the Istituto Elettrotecnico
Nazionale Galileo Ferraris, Turin, Italy, where he
carried out theoretical and experimental studies on
breaking apparatus and computation of electromagnetic fields in nonlinear devices. From 1982 to 2010,
he was an Associate Professor and he is currently a
Full Professor at the Politecnico di Torino. He has
authored more than 100 scientific papers. His main
research interests include the study of breaking apparatus, electromagnetic
fields by means of analytical and numerical methods, mitigation of lowfrequency magnetic fields, security in electrical power systems, and rational
use of energy.
Dr. Tartaglia is a member of the IEEE Industry Applications Society and
of AEIT (Federazione Italiana di Elettrotecnica, Elettronica, Automazione,
Informatica e Telecomunicazioni). He is also a member of CIGRE Task Force
Working Group 36.04.01 on Magnetic Field Mitigation Methods and of the
Technical Committee CT 106 on Human Exposure to Electromagnetic Fields
of the Comitato Elettrotecnico Italiano. He is also the scientific responsible
of research contracts with public institutions and private companies, and is
involved in European Community projects. In 1977, he was the recipient of the
Bonavera Award for Electrical Engineering from the Accademia delle Scienze
di Torino.

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